Sunday morning’s cable news circuit once again demonstrated why senior administration officials so often spend more time correcting media narratives than explaining policy.
Appearing across Meet the Press and Face the Nation, Secretary of State Marco Rubio was subjected to a familiar pattern of questioning: assumptions embedded as facts, motives ascribed rather than examined, and repeated demands to justify actions that were already explained. The pushback Rubio delivered was not theatrical, nor was it evasive. It was corrective. And it was necessary only because the framing itself was flawed.
The first line of attack centered on Venezuela’s oil industry, with the implication that American involvement following the capture of Nicolás Maduro must be driven by resource acquisition rather than security.
Marco Rubio is so good.
“This is the Western Hemisphere. We’re not going to allow it to be a base of operations for our adversaries… They won’t come from outside our hemisphere, destabilize our region in our own backyard, and us have to pay the price for it. It’s over.” pic.twitter.com/GzLjNtBV3h
— Geiger Capital (@Geiger_Capital) January 4, 2026
